Brendan Burgess
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In Friday's Irish Times, there was a report by Una McCaffrey about a meeting of the Dáil's Finance and Public Services Committee.
This was in the context of a meeting to discuss bank charges and credit card charges.
My gut feeling is that there is too much "red-tape" regulation of financial services, but not enough real regulation. If a bank fills in the forms and puts in a few warnings on its product literature, then it can do what it wants.
In particular, I hate the ads which say "terms and conditions apply" - of course terms and conditions apply. It would be much better if they were obliged to quote some real condition up front.
I also hate the "ABC is regulated by the Irish Financial Services Regulatory Authority". What does this mean? Absolutely nothing. It's an ego-trip for IFSRA, but a waste of money and an irritant to listeners. Worse still, it may convince people that there is some form of guarantee.
IFSRA loves publishing prominent warnings about companies registered in the Caribbean who have no license to opertate here. But they have yet to take real action against big Irish institutions such as the Irish Nationwide over their lending practices or Irish Life and Permanent over their geared trackers.
Brendan
FF TD Ned O'Keeffe ...suggested that the banking sector could already be "over-regulated". "IFSRA is already all over the place as far as I can see it" he said, adding that bank services, in his view,usually offer good value for money.
This was in the context of a meeting to discuss bank charges and credit card charges.
My gut feeling is that there is too much "red-tape" regulation of financial services, but not enough real regulation. If a bank fills in the forms and puts in a few warnings on its product literature, then it can do what it wants.
In particular, I hate the ads which say "terms and conditions apply" - of course terms and conditions apply. It would be much better if they were obliged to quote some real condition up front.
I also hate the "ABC is regulated by the Irish Financial Services Regulatory Authority". What does this mean? Absolutely nothing. It's an ego-trip for IFSRA, but a waste of money and an irritant to listeners. Worse still, it may convince people that there is some form of guarantee.
IFSRA loves publishing prominent warnings about companies registered in the Caribbean who have no license to opertate here. But they have yet to take real action against big Irish institutions such as the Irish Nationwide over their lending practices or Irish Life and Permanent over their geared trackers.
Brendan